Q: Briefly describe how organisms, populations, habitats, ecosystems, biomes, and communities are relate to each other

A: Within each ecosystem, there are habitats which may also vary in size. A habitat is the place where a population lives. A population is a group of living organisms of the same kind living in the same place at the same time. [ All of the populations interact and form a community. The community of living things interacts with the non-living world around it to form the ecosystem. The habitat must

supply the needs of organisms, such as food, water, temperature, oxygen, and minerals. If the population's needs are not met, it will move to a better habitat. Two different populations can not occupy the same niche at the same time, however. So the processes of competition, predation, cooperation, and symbiosis occur.
They are all units within the same ecological hierarchy. It is a way of classifying the interaction of organisms and their environment, from a single population all the way up to the biosphere.
Biosphere - Contains every ecosystem on the planet.
Ecosystem - Contains multiple populations of species interacting in a habitat, specifically consisting of all plants, animals, and microorganisms.
Community - Consists of two or more interacting populations of species in a habitat.
Population - Consists of all members of a single species of an organism in a habitat. ]